pinmonkey46
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Does anyone know that if i use my Nikon d3000 in bulb mode will I damage the sensor. What is a safe time to use in bulb mode. Thanks
Does anyone know that if i use my Nikon d3000 in bulb mode will I damage the sensor. What is a safe time to use in bulb mode. Thanks
but why would you want to do that anyway?
The OP didnt ask that 
the traditional way is to open the camera shutter for a extended period of time to allow the camera to record the movement of the stars across the sky, and it is possible under the right conditions to achieve exposures in excess of one hour in a single exposure to capture the stars movement. A note of caution with this method is the risk of your camera/sensor overheating so please take this into consideration
The other way, that is more popular and more accessible to most photographers is to go down the stacked approach, this is where you take a series of single exposures and then layer each one on top of the other to create the effect of a longer exposure time
pinmonkey46 said:Does anyone know that if i use my Nikon d3000 in bulb mode will I damage the sensor. What is a safe time to use in bulb mode. Thanks
gridlock said:I was reading the tutorial on star trials here. It says
But if you want star trials without gaps, surely you need to take the stacked images in quick succession. Doesn't that have the same heating effect on the sensor as one long exposure?
miniyazz said:It would be dependant not only on what you are shooting, but also what lens you are shooting it with. For example 5mins at the sun with a 600mm is very different from 5mins at the sun with a 24mm.
At the end of the day, simple logic dictates that you are unlikely to damage your sensor if you are taking normally exposed pictures. Many dSLRs these days are built for 10-30mins of video capture, which has to be at least as demanding on the sensor - and if your sensor is genuinely starting to overheat through long exposure, you will see it as excessive noise in your photographs.